Opinions of Last Pass?

I'm looking at switching out my Steganos Password manager and going with Last Pass, mainly because it syncs across my laptop, Windows Phone and My Surface RT.
Down and dirty folks those of you that are using last pass what is your valued opinion. Is this the way to go?

Thanks John
Teamwork is essential; it gives the enemy other people to shoot at. (Murphy's War Laws #39)

I use LastPass on all my devices. You will need to get the paid version ($1/month), to use it on Windows Phone. I can't compare it with anything else, since it's the only password manager I use. It works satisfactorily. There could be a couple improvements in terms of user interface, but other than that I am happy with it.

I've used it for a couple of years and it works fine for me. I especially like the mobile aspects of it and the price for mobile use is reasonable. It is very convenient to have access to your passwords across all your devices. I feel it is very secure. I believe, your master password is not stored on their servers so you don't have to worry about their servers being breached and all your data (passwords) are encrypted before it leaves your machine. Steve Gibson, internet security guru, thinks highly of it and says they do it right. Here's a discussion by Steve: https://www.grc.com/sn/sn-256.htm
Don

I use it exclusively and love it.
I did just now run into one little hitch: I haven't been to the Lounge in a while to do other than read, and when LastPass tried to log me in it bombed (all I had done was to click a link to a screenshot posted elsewhere in another section and it wanted me to log in to see it). I discovered that LastPass had not saved the username, only the password, and I couldn't remember which screen name I had here and nearly got locked out. I finally remembered on the 3rd try but for some reason the combo still didn't work, so I went through the password reset routine and reset the new generated pass back to my member number. Again, LastPass did not save the username so I had to save it manually to get it to remember. The upshot is, if you say "yes" when it asks to save a site's login, open LastPass and be sure it saved everything you want it to remember. I have run into this 2 or 3 times, mostly with banking stuff. Otherwise LastPass is great IMO! I rarely use my tablet so haven't paid for the mobile access plan and don't know how well that functions.

Extremely happy, feature rich, LastPass user for the last 3-4 years... It rules my life! The $12 per year is quite a small price to pay for what I believe to be a near perfect Password manger system. (it also automatically fills in forms among other capabilities)

Been using LastPass free version for several months on two desktop PCs and one laptop.

PROS:
All saved passwords are available on all 3 computers all the time (assuming the internet connection is working, of course).

In the past i used the same password for many unimportant websites. LastPass occasionally says " we notice you've used this password elsewhere. would you like to generate a new unique password for this website?"

For every saved password there's an "Edit" option with a comments box where you can make notes about the website, the password or anything else you deem relevant. Also you can edit the entire entry.

It's free.

CONS:
LastPass "Vault" lists all websites and passwords you have saved. The list is arranged alphabetically. Sometimes this is confusing because, for example, "Comcast.net" may be listed under "login.comcast.net" . You can edit the website name manually if you wish, so it's not all bad!

The mobile version of LastPass for a cellphone costs money. If you need to "sync" all your passwords onto your cellphone, be ready to spend a little money.

OTHER:
LastPass free version is definitely worth having and, if you frequently use the internet on your phone or tablet, it's probably worth paying for.

i still don't entrust my username or password for bank and credit card websites to LastPass; prefer to memorize them. However, if i had more than those two sensitive websites then i'd surely need to have them saved somewhere.

My problem is, that I suppose like many others I'm running one password manager on my laptop, a different one on my Windows Phone, and now a third on my Surface. I would love to keep using the one on my Laptop (Steganos Password Manager) because I've been using it for a long time and am familiar with the way it works. Problem though is that even thought the windows Phone is now the fastest selling phone in Europe, (Steganos is in Germany) they still aren't making an app.
Sooooooo I need to re group and try and get everything the same. The one I'm using on my phone, but doesn't offer any back up and that's a total P.I.T.A.! I don't mind paying for their software if it does what they say. I'm running it now on my Surface and will try it for a month or so.

thanks

Thanks John
Teamwork is essential; it gives the enemy other people to shoot at. (Murphy's War Laws #39)

LastPass will allow access to your passwords in your Windows Phone, John. I use it there. There is no browser integration, though, you just need to do some app switching and copying and pasting, but it works decently.